|

Click here to expand and collapse the player

Draft 7.30

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (13 ratings)
Draft 7.30 album cover
01
Xylin Room
6:11 $0.99
02
IV VV IV VV VIII
4:53 $0.99
03
61e.CR
5:41 $0.99
04
Tapr
3:17 $0.99
05
Surripere
11:25
06
Theme of Sudden Roundabout
4:54 $0.99
07
VL Al 5
4:59 $0.99
08
P.:Ntil
7:10 $0.99
09
V-Proc
6:02 $0.99
10
Reniform Puls
8:39 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 63:11

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

eMusic Features

0

The Noise of Neu!

By Philip Sherburne, eMusic Contributor

No history of electronic music would be complete without a chapter dedicated to Kraftwerk, the German quartet who introduced synthesizers and chugging, "motorik" rhythms to pop music - and in so doing laid the groundwork for techno (and left no small mark upon hip-hop as well, given that their "Trans-Europe Express" was heavily sampled for Afrika Baambaata's "Planet Rock"). Fewer genealogists of electronica remember to include the contributions of a group called NEU!, but the… more »

They Say All Music Guide

After an LP and several EPs of baffling, beat-damaged digital concrete, Autechre was definitely due for a change. Rob Brown and Sean Booth have never turned in a substandard production, but 2001′s cold, dispirited Confield merely flaunted their programming prowess instead of offering music that listeners could enjoy. Something less than a radical reinvention, Draft 7.30 does return the duo to the more inviting climes of past masterpieces like Tri Repetae (if not Basscadet). The record is immediately more compelling than Confield, with less focus on their trademarked random-beat-making software. A few melodies, suitably obtuse and wispy, creep in as well. “V-Proc” is an excellent production, somehow spacious and claustrophobic at the same time, with stuttered percussion and a hip-hop beat pounding away in the background. “61e.CR” and “P.:Ntil” also have glimpses of a repetitive beat, even if the usual recycle bin of percussion noise nearly overwhelms them near the end. The 12-minute “Surripere” is an epic of deliciously chilly atmospheres, though the usual Autechre beat madness could’ve used a timeout. Most importantly, though, the duo has pulled away from the brink; no one ever doubted that Autechre was at the extreme of experimental techno for its own sake, but given a record like Draft 7.30, listeners might actually return for multiple listens. – John Bush

more »